Welcome to HCV Advocate’s hepatitis blog. The intent of this blog is to keep our website audience up-to-date on information about hepatitis and to answer some of our web site and training audience questions. People are encouraged to submit questions and post comments.

For more information on how to use this blog, the HCV drug pipeline, and for more information on HCV clinical trials
click here

Be sure to check out our other blogs: The HBV Advocate Blog and Hepatitis & Tattoos.


Alan Franciscus

Editor-in-Chief

HCV Advocate



Monday, August 17, 2015

HCV Drugs: AbbVie, BMS, Merck —Alan Franciscus, Editor-in-Chief

AbbVie:

TECHNIVIE:
On July 24, The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first interferon-free combination therapy to treat HCV genotype 4. The combination called TECHNIVIE (ombitasvir, paritaprevir and ritonavir) is taken with ribavirin and for 12 weeks.  There was a total of 135 patients in the study—91 received TECHNIVIE with ribavirin and 41 received TECHNIVIE without ribavirin.  None of the trial participants had cirrhosis.  In the group that received TECHNIVIE with ribavirin there was a 100% cure rate; in the group that did not receive ribavirin there was a 91% cure rate.  Since the study did not include people with cirrhosis the FDA did not approve TECHNIVIE for the treatment of genotype 4 with cirrhosis.  AbbVie has indicated that there are on-going studies of genotype 4 cirrhotic patients and they will pursue an indication for cirrhotic patients on the TECHNIVIE product label. 

Genotype 4 is uncommon in this country—the estimated prevalence is between 1.3% to 2.3%.  There are some higher populations in areas around New York City, Los Angeles and Southern California estimated between 2 to 3%.   Genotype 4 is the fourth most common genotype worldwide.  It also accounts for 90% (6,030,000) of the hepatitis C population in Egypt.  The remaining HCV population is genotype 1.  The total HCV population of Egypt is 6.7 million. 

Source:  FDA Press Release (The total HCV population of Egypt is 6.7 million.

Be sure to check out our fact sheet on hepatitis C in Egypt: http://hcvadvocate.org/hepatitis/factsheets_pdf/HCAW_Egypt.pdf  

New Combo:
A new phase 2 study of ombitasvir, paritaprevir and ritonavir—once-a-day  combination of AbbVie drugs to treat 181 genotype 1b patients for a treatment period of 12 weeks ( without cirrhosis) or 24 weeks (with cirrhosis).   The cure rates among the groups are listed below:
  • No-cirrhosis group: 95.2% cure rate among people who had never been treated (treatment naïve (42 patients); 90% cure rate among people who had been previously treated (treatment experienced  (40 patients))
  • Cirrhosis group: 97.9% cure rate among treatment naïve (47 patients);  96.2% cure rate in the treatment-experienced group (52 patients)
The most common side effects were headache, lack of energy, itching, and diarrhea. There was one treatment discontinuation due to treatment-related side effects.

This combination without interferon or ribavirin in a once-a-day pill for people with HCV genotype 1b would be a welcome addition to the landscape of hepatitis C treatment. 

Source: Efficacy and Safety of Ombitasvir, Paritaprevir, and Ritonavir in an Open-label Study of Patients With Genotype 1b Chronic Hepatitis C Virus, With and Without Cirrhosis—Erica Lawtz– et al. http://dx.doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2015.07.001

Bristol-Myers Squibb
On July 24, 2015, the FDA approved BMS’s Daklinza (daclatasvir) in combination with Gilead’s sofosbuvir to treat HCV genotype 3.  In the phase 3 studies of patients who were treated with Daklinza and sofosobuvir for 12 weeks the cure rates broken down by cirrhosis and prior treatment response are listed below:
  • Without Cirrhosis:  Treatment naïve—98%;
    Treatment experienced—92%
  • With Cirrhosis:  Treatment naïve—58%;
    Treatment experienced—69%
The most common side effects were fatigue and headache.

The FDA press release noted that the response rates were reduced for HCV genotype 3 patients with cirrhosis.  It should also be noted that the treatment duration is only 12 weeks as opposed to 24 weeks with the current standard of care—Sovaldi plus ribavirin.  Still there is an unmet medical need for people with HCV genotype 3 with cirrhosis. 

Source:  FDA press release. 

Merck
On July 28, 2015, Merck announced that the FDA had accepted their New Drug Application for grazoprevir/elbasvir for the treatment of HCV genotype 1, 4 and 6 infection.  Merck has been granted Breakthrough Therapy designation for grazoprevir/elbasvir for the treatment of patients with HCV genotype 1 with end stage kidney disease who are on hemodialysis, and also for those patients with HCV genotype 4.

The cure rates for grazoprevir/elbasvir (one-pill/once-a-day) are impressive:  genotype 1 up to 100%; genotype 4 up to 100% and up to 80% for genotype 6.

Merck stated that they expected a notification for drug approval from the FDA by January 28, 2016.

Source:  Company press release

http://hcvadvocate.org/news/newsLetter/2015/advocate0815_mid.html#1

Demystifying Hepatitis C for Native Americans: Antonio Gonzalez's Story

When Antonio Gonzalez was diagnosed with hepatitis C in Geneva, Switzerland, doctors told him if he didn't get a new liver within five years, he didn't stand a chance at a long life. As he waited for a new liver, Gonzalez thought about all the moments he'd miss. He wanted to be around for his son's graduation.

Gonzalez hadn't even heard of hepatitis C when he was diagnosed, and didn't know how he got it. A Native American and member of the Comcáac nation, he surmised that he was probably infected with hepatitis C while fighting in Vietnam, where he suffered from many major open wounds.

While he was sick, Gonzalez put together a box of things that people could remember him by after he passed away. When he finally got his liver transplant in 2005, he was able to unpack the box and begin living again. "So beautiful to receive a liver and to unpack, like, 'I'm not going anywhere!'" he said.

Read more....

Patient Community Forum on Hepatitis C: Fresno, CA - August 20, 2015

Saturday, August 15, 2015

UK:Hepatitis C patients in England denied lifesaving liver drug

Health experts concerned about decision not to extend Daklinza treatment to patients with genotype 3 strain of virus

Thousands of people in England with a chronic form of liver disease are being denied access to life-saving drugs that are available to patients in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Despite being recommended by European regulators and available in countries such as France and Germany, draft guidance recently issued by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), the body that advises NHS England on whether to fund certain drugs, recommends restricting the use of Daklinza in England. The stance will affect the treatment of adult patients with a particular strain of hepatitis C.

The move has dismayed health experts and liver disease charities who say it will mean a large subset of the sickest and most at risk patients in England will not receive the treatment they need to prevent them from potentially fatal liver failure or cancer.

Read more....

Friday, August 14, 2015

Hepatitis C cases prompt public health emergency in Fayette County

FAYETTE COUNTY -State Health Commissioner Jerome Adams, M.D., M.P.H., has declared a public health emergency for Fayette County, allowing the county health department to establish a syringe exchange program as part of a broader effort to reduce the spread of Hepatitis C.

"Fayette County is battling a Hepatitis C epidemic tied to intravenous drug use," said Dr. Adams. "County officials have submitted a comprehensive, multi-pronged plan to combat this epidemic, and a syringe exchange is one part of this effort to help reduce the spread of this devastating disease."

Senate Enrolled Act 461 made syringe exchange programs legal in Indiana for the first time, under certain circumstances. The law lays out a set of procedural and substantive requirements that local communities must meet in order for an emergency declaration to be considered by the state health commissioner. 

Read more....

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Canada: Sydney advocate praises N.S. coverage of hep C drugs

SYDNEY — A Cape Breton health-care advocate is welcoming the province’s decision to cover a new line of hepatitis C drugs.

Christine Porter, who runs the Ally Centre of Cape Breton in Sydney, said any move to lower prescription drug costs for the marginalized is a step in the right direction.

She said the island is home to the highest per capita rates of the disease in both the province and the country.

“It’s a great thing when the government covers medications for any disease, especially with hepatitis C; the cost is exorbitant unless you have a really, really good medical plan,” said Porter.

Read more...

A Time to Cure: The Growing Case for New Hepatitis C Treatments

One out of every 100 Americans is living with a deadly and communicable virus, yet most can't access the cure which will save their lives and halt the disease's lethal trajectory.

Hepatitis C now kills more Americans each year than HIV/AIDS and is 10 times more infectious. It has become a leading cause of liver failure and liver cancer -- the fastest-rising cause of all cancer-related deaths. For too long this blood-borne virus has silently ravaged communities across the country, often going unnoticed and untreated until it was too late. Until 2013, the only treatments for hepatitis C were painful and effective only half the time, leaving many patients with nowhere to turn, despite their diagnosis.

But now the tide is turning. Multiple treatments for hepatitis C currently offer cure rates of near 100 percent with minimal side effects. Now some of the biggest obstacles facing hepatitis C patients are health insurers.

Read more...